The Life of David, Vol. II.

by A. W. Pink

CHAPTER NINETY

His Wise Decision

2 Samuel 24

"When thou takest
the sum of the children of Israel after their number, then shall they give
every man a ransom for his soul unto the Lord, when thou numberest them;
that there be no plague among them, when thou numberest them"
(Ex. 30:12). In the absence of any commission From God to do so, David not
only did wrong in yielding to the pride of his heart by insisting that a
military census should be taken of Israel, but he also erred grievously in
the way it was carried out. This it is which explains to us why divine
judgment followed upon his being so remiss, and why that plague fell on all
the nation, for the law laid the responsibility on every individual alike.
The amount of the required "ransom" was so small (a shilling—a
quarter) that it lay within the capacity of the poorest. "The rich were
not allowed to give more, thus teaching us that all mankind are, in this
matter, equal. All had sinned and come short of the glory of God; therefore
all needed, equally needed a ransom.

"This numbering
was a solemn ceremonial that could not be done quickly, as we see by the
first chapter in the book called Numbers. Therefore there was time for the
officers to have looked up in the Law what was required of them. For a man
to present himself to God without a ransom was a solemn and dangerous thing
to do. The fact that the result, which they were warned by this law to
avoid, came upon them, shows us that we are expected to read the Word, and
that God will not contradict His own Word. As Paul warns us, ‘If we
believe not, yet He abideth faithful; He cannot deny Himself’: (2 Tim.
2:13)" (C. H. Bright). How loudly ought this incident to speak unto us
in this flesh-pleasing and God-defying age: to ignore the requirements of
the divine law is to court certain disaster—true alike for the individual
and for the nation.

"So when they had
gone through all the land, they came to Jerusalem at the end of nine months
and twenty days. And Joab gave up the sum of the number of the people unto
the king" (2 Sam. 24:8,9). For nine long months the pride of David’s
heart deceived him, as alas, lust had before dimmed his eyes the same length
of time (2 Sam. 11, 12). During this season his conscience slumbered, and
there was no exercise of it before God over his action—such is ever the
case when we are caught in the toils of Satan. Does it strike us as
well-nigh incredible that one so favored of God and one who had so signally
honored Him in the general course of his life, should now have such a
deplorable and protracted lapse? Let each of us answer the question out of
his checked experience. We doubt not that the majority of our Christian
readers will hang their heads with shame, as they are conscious of similar
backslidings in their own history; and if perchance a minority have been
preserved from such falls, well may they marvel at the distinguishing mercy
which has been vouchsafed them.

"And David’s
heart smote him after that he had numbered the people" (v. 10). This
indicated that he was a regenerate soul, for it is ever one of the marks of
a true believer to repent of his misdeeds, for though on the one hand the
flesh lusteth against the spirit, on the other the spirit (the nature
received at the new birth) is contrary to the flesh, and delights not in its
works. For almost a year David appears to have been indifferent to his sin,
but now he is conscious of his wickedness, without, so far as we are
informed, any human instrument convicting him of the evil which he had done.
It is good to see that though he had remained so long in the path of
self-will, yet his heart was not obdurate: though his conscience had indeed
slumbered, yet it was not dead. It is cause for real thanksgiving when we

We are not here told
what it was that aroused David from his spiritual stupor and caused his
heart to smite him: simply the bare fact is stated. Here again is where we
receive help by comparing the supplementary account furnished by 1
Chronicles 21, for there we are told "And God was displeased with this
thing; therefore He smote Israel. And David said unto God, I have sinned
greatly" (vv. 7, 8). In 2 Samuel 24 David’s confession of his sin (v.
10) followed his contrition, so that a careful comparison of the two
passages enables us to ascertain that the chiding from his heart was the
effect of the Lord’s being displeased at what he had done. This is one of
many illustrations which serves to bring out the characteristic differences
of the two books: the one is mainly exoteric, the other largely esoteric:
that is to say, 1 and 2 Samuel narrates the historical facts, whereas 1 and
2 Chronicles generally reveals the hidden springs from which the actions
proceed.

"And God was
displeased with this thing; therefore He smote Israel" (1 Chron. 21:7).
Here we learn how God regarded the policy David had pursued: He was
offended, for His Law had been completely disregarded. "And He smote
Israel": observe particularly that this comes before David’s
confession of his sin (v. 8), and before God "sent pestilence upon
Israel" (v. 14). Ere God caused the plague to fall upon the Nation, He
first smote David’s heart! He did not turn His back upon David! As another
has pointed out, "The whole system of Israel, by this national
transgression, was now defiled and tainted, and ripe for severity or
judgment: this pride was the giving up of God, and God would have been
dealing righteously had He at once laid Israel aside, as He did Adam, in
such a case." Instead, He acted here in sovereign grace.

No, the Lord was far
from utterly forsaking David. Put together the two statements, and in this
order, "And God was displeased with this thing; therefore He smote
Israel" (1 Chron. 21:7), "And David’s heart smote him after he
had numbered the people" (2 Sam. 24:10). Do not these two statements
stand related as cause to effect, the one revealing the Lord’s working,
the other showing the result produced in his servant. God now smote David’s
heart, making him to feel His sore displeasure. David, as a child of God,
might be tempted, over-taken in a fault, and thus brought to shame and
grief; but could he be left impenitent? No; no more than Peter was (Luke
22:32). The reprobate are given up to hardness of heart; but not so the
righteous; the Lord would not suffer David to remain indifferent to his sin,
but graciously wrought conviction and contrition within him. And so far from
David’s conscience being as one which had been "seared with a hot
iron" (1 Tim. 4:2), it was sensitive and quick to respond to the
influences of God’s Spirit.

"And David’s
heart smote him after that he had numbered the people." What a warning
is this for us. How it should speak to our hearts! What a solemn and
salutary lesson does it point: the very thing which David imagined would
bring him pleasure, caused him pain! This is ever the case: to listen unto
Satan’s temptations is to court certain trouble, to be attracted by the
gilt on the bait he dangles before us, will be to our inevitable undoing. It
was so with Eve, with Dinah (Gen. 34:1, 2), with Achan. Indulging the pride
of his heart, David fondly supposed that to secure an accurate knowledge of
the full military strength of his kingdom would prove gratifying; instead,
he now grieves over his folly. What insanity it is for us to invest folly
with the garb of satisfaction: not only will a sense of sin dampen the
Christian’s carnal joy, but "at the last it biteth like a serpent,
and stingeth like an adder" (Prov. 23:32).

"And David said
unto the Lord, I have sinned greatly in that I have done: and now, I beseech
Thee, O Lord, take away the iniquity of Thy servant, for I have done very
foolishly" (v. 10). David had been convicted by the Spirit, and a heavy
sense of guilt oppressed him—ever an intolerable burden to a renewed soul.
Sensible of his wrongdoing, he earnestly sought forgiveness of the Lord.
Where divine grace possesses the heart, the conscience of a saint, upon
reflection, will reprove him for his transgressions. It is at this point
there appears the great difference between the regenerate and the empty
professor or religious hypocrite. The latter may afterwards have a
realization of his madness and suffer keen remorse therefrom, but he will
not get down in the dust before God and unsparingly condemn himself;
instead, he invariably excuses himself by blaming his circumstances, his
associates, or those lusts which are now his master. This is one of the
outstanding characteristics of depraved human nature: Adam took not upon
himself the blame for his fall, but sought to throw the onus of it upon his

But it is far otherwise
with those who have been made the subjects of a miracle of grace. One who is
born again has been given an honest heart, and one of the plainest evidences
of this is that its possessor is honest with himself, with his fellows, and
above all, with God. An honest soul is sincere, open, candid, abhorring
deception and lies. Therefore in unmistakable contrast from the hypocrite
the genuine believer will, upon realizing his transgressions, humble himself
before the Lord, and with unfeigned contrition and fervent prayer seek His
forgiveness, sincerely purposing by His grace to return no more to his
folly. Wondrous indeed is the ministry which grace performs, making our very
pride to be an occasion of increasing our humility! Thus it was with David.
The same appears again in the case of Hezekiah: "Hezekiah rendered not
again according to the benefit done unto him: for his heart was lifted up:
therefore was wrath upon him, and upon Judah and Jerusalem. Notwithstanding,
Hezekiah humbled himself for the pride of his heart" (2
Chron. 32:25, 26).

"And David said
unto the Lord, I have sinned greatly in that I have done: and now, I beseech
Thee, O Lord, take away the iniquity of Thy servant, for I have done very
foolishly." It is by the depth of his conviction, the sincerity of his
repentance, and the heartiness of his confession, that the child of God is
identified. So far from making any attempt to extenuate himself, so far from
throwing the blame upon Satan (who had tempted him), David unsparingly
condemned himself. To others it might seem a small thing that he had
done. But David felt he had "sinned greatly." Ah, he now saw his
deed in the light of God’s holiness. In true confession of sin we do not
spare ourselves or minimize our misdemeanors, but frankly and feelingly
acknowledge the enormity of them. "I have done very foolishly,"
David owned, for what he had done was in the pride of his heart, and it was
veritable madness for him to be vain of his subjects when they were God’s
people, as it is insane for the Christians to be proud of the gifts and
graces which the Spirit has bestowed upon him.

"For (Heb.
"And") when David was up in the morning, the word of the Lord came
unto the prophet Gad, David’s seer" (v. 11). This seems to indicate
that David’s confession had been made during the hours of darkness. God
"giveth His beloved sleep" (Ps. 127:2), and likewise He withholds
it when it serves His purpose. And it is always for our good (Rom.
8:28) that He does so, whether we perceive it or no. Sometimes He
"giveth songs in the night" (Job 35:10); we read too of
"visions of the night" (Job 4:2, 13); but at other times God
removes sleep from our eyes and speaks to us about our sins. Then it is we
can say with Asaph, "My sore ran in the night, and ceased not: my soul
refused to be comforted" (Ps. 77:2), and then it is that we have a
taste of David’s experience: "I am weary with my groaning; all the
night make I my bed to swim; I water my couch with my tears" (Ps. 6:6).
But whatever be God’s object in withholding sleep, it is blessed when we
can say, "By night on my bed I sought Him whom my soul
loveth" (Song of Solomon 3:1).

"And when David
was up in the morning, the word of the Lord came unto the prophet Gad, David’s
seer, saying, Go and say unto David, Thus saith the Lord, I offer thee three
things; choose thee one of them, that I may do it unto thee" (vv. 11,
12). The solemn exercises of David’s heart during the night season were to
prepare him for God’s message of judgment. He had been made to taste
something of the bitterness of his folly while others were slumbering, but
now he is to know definitely how sorely displeased God was. When the Lord is
about to send us a special message, be it one of cheer or of reproof. He
first fits the heart to receive it. When the morning broke, the Lord
commissioned Gad to deliver His ultimatum to the king. Gad was a prophet,
and he is here designated "David’s seer" because he was one who,
on certain occasions, was wont to counsel him in the things of God (cf. 1
Sam. 23:5). At this time he had to deliver a far-from-pleasant message—such
often falls to the lot of God’s servants.

His heavenly Father
must correct David, yet He graciously gave him leave to make choice whether
it should be by famine, war, or pestilence: whether it should be a
long-protracted judgment or a brief yet terribly severe one. Matthew Henry
suggested that the Lord had a fourfold design in this. First, to humble
David the more for his sin, which he would see to be exceeding sinful, when
he came to consider that each of the judgments were exceeding dreadful.
Second, to upbraid him for the proud conceit he had entertained of his own
sovereignty over Israel: he had become so great a monarch that he might now
do whatever he would: very well, says God, choose which of these three
things you prefer. Third, to grant him some encouragement under the
chastisement: so far from the Lord having utterly disfellowshiped him, He
let him decide what He should do. Fourth, that he might more patiently
endure the rod seeing it was one of his own selection.

"So Gad came to
David, and told him, and said unto him, Shall seven years of famine come
unto thee in thy land? or wilt thou flee three months before thine enemies,
while they pursue thee? or that there be three days’ pestilence in thy
land? now advise, and see what answer I shall return to Him that sent
me" (v. 13). Here is the third thing connected with this incident which
is apt to greatly puzzle the casual reader. First, that such an apparently
trifling act on David’s part should have so sorely displeased the Lord.
Second, that He suffered Satan to tempt David, and then was angry with him
for doing as the tempter suggested. These we have already considered. And
now, after David had been convicted of his sin, sincerely repented of the
same, had confessed it, and sought the Lord’s forgiveness, that judgment
should fall so heavily upon him. It is really surprising that so many of the
commentators when dealing with this "difficulty" fail to bear in
mind the opening sentence of the chapter—the key to all that follows:
"And again the anger of the Lord was kindled against Israel."

God had a controversy
with the Nation, and this it is which accounts for the character of His
governmental dealings with them. His judgment could not be averted, and
therefore He punished their pride and rebellion by leaving them to suffer
the consequences of their king’s following out the natural impulse of his
heart. But there are several other aspects of the case which must be borne
in mind. David’s sin had not been a private but a public one, and
though God forgave him as to his personal concern, yet he had to be publicly
humiliated. Again, while God remits the penal and eternal consequences of
sin unto a contrite saint, yet even penitents are chastised and often made
to smart severely in this world for their folly. Though God be
long-suffering, He will by no means clear the guilty. True, His gifts and
calling are without repentance (Rom. 11:29), and unto His own His
compassions fail not (Lam. 3:22); yet, the righteousness of His government
must be vindicated.

What has last been
pointed out holds good in all dispensations, for God’s "ways"
change not. Correction is ever a characteristic of the Covenant, for whom
the Lord loveth He chasteneth" (Heb. 12:6). Had David walked in his
integrity and in humility before God, he would have been spared severe
discipline, but now he must bear the rod. "Then will I visit their
transgression with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes; nevertheless My
loving kindness will I not utterly take from him, nor suffer My faithfulness
to fail" (Ps. 89:32, 33): that clearly states the principle. "And
David said unto Gad, I am in a great strait: let us fall now into the hand
of the Lord; for His mercies are great: and let me not fall into the hand of
man" (v. 14). Here was his wise decision, the meaning and blessedness
of which we must leave for consideration in our next chapter.